Reservoir Dogs Review

Before he became a household name, Tarantino stunned us all with this low-budget tale analyzing the before-and-after (and remarkably very little of the "during") of a diamond heist. Set largely within the confines of one warehouse, the movie is so chock full of witty and quotable dialogue ("Mr. Brown? That sounds too much like Mr. Shit. ") and eye-popping scenes (When, say, the suspected cop is doused in gasoline and has his ear cut off) that it has become an instant classic.

Tarantino has continued to impress in such milestones as Pulp Fiction (which, if you watch repeatedly, is revealed as a sequel to Dogs), but his first-film gem is something that will be a cinematic reference point for ages.

A loose remake of the Chinese actioner City on Fire.

For its ten-year anniversary (and coinciding with the reissue of Pulp and Jackie Brown), Dogs gets the double-disc DVD treatment, an exhaustive collection of extras including the widescreen and letterboxed versions of the film, deleted scenes (including two alternate angles of the ear scene), new retrospective interviews, audio commentary, and a whole lot more. Some of this is extremely strange -- like K-Billy radio outtakes, a 22-second "Reservoir Dogs Style Guide," and even a documentary about the Reservoir Dogs action heroes. The clever (from a merchandising perspective) catch is that the DVD is being released in five versions, with five of its main "Mr." characters on the covers. Artisan sent me Mr. Pink, which includes a Mr. Pink-specific insert, photos, dialogue quotes, and so on.

For the extremely obsessed, nothing other than the Reservoir Dogs 4-Pack will do, which includes four copies of the movie (with every cover but Mr. Brown, allegedly the rarest of the bunch). (The content of the disc sets is all the same.)